
Your sunroom should not sit empty every summer. We upgrade glass, insulation, and cooling so the space works for your family in every month of the year.

Sunroom remodeling in St. Cloud means updating, expanding, or fully rebuilding an existing enclosed porch or glass room so it can be used comfortably all year - most jobs take between two and six weeks from the first day of work to completion, depending on how much of the structure needs to change.
A lot of St. Cloud homeowners have a Florida room or sunroom that was functional when the house was built but has never been comfortable in summer heat. The glass is old, there is no real cooling, and the seals have started to fail. Sunroom remodeling in St. Cloud addresses all of that in one project rather than patching problems one at a time.
If you are not sure yet whether a remodel or a new build is the right call, take a look at our sunroom design page for help thinking through the options before committing to a scope.
If you stop using your sunroom entirely once Florida's heat sets in, the space is not built for this climate. A room that traps heat with no real cooling is not a sunroom - it is storage with windows. The right glass and a dedicated cooling system fix that.
St. Cloud gets heavy summer rainfall, and any gap in the roof, frame, or window seals will show up as a stain or soft spot after a hard rain. Left alone, that moisture leads to mold and structural damage that costs far more to fix. Do not wait on this one.
When condensation forms on the inside surface of your sunroom glass on a humid morning, the seal between the glass panes has failed. In Central Florida's humidity, failed seals are common in older enclosures. The glass panel itself needs to be replaced - wiping it will not solve the problem.
Frames that have shifted over time cause doors and windows to bind or leave gaps. If you have to force a door closed or feel a draft around a window frame, the structure has moved enough that a cosmetic fix will not hold. This is especially common in older aluminum-frame enclosures.
Our sunroom remodeling work in St. Cloud ranges from targeted upgrades to complete rebuilds. Some homeowners only need the glass replaced and a mini-split cooling unit added. Others have a room where the frame has shifted, water has gotten in, and the whole structure needs to come apart and be rebuilt properly. We handle both ends of that range, and every project starts with a site visit so we know exactly what we are working with before we quote.
Whether the goal is a screen room installation for a more open feel or a fully insulated four-season space, we walk you through the tradeoffs - including what each option costs and how long each version of the project takes in Osceola County. For homeowners who want help planning the space before committing, our sunroom design service is the right first step.
Suits homeowners whose existing sunroom has multiple problems - failing glass, no cooling, and water damage - and want everything addressed in one project.
Suits homeowners whose structure is sound but whose glass panels are foggy, cracked, or not blocking Florida heat the way they should.
Suits homeowners who want to convert a three-season room into a year-round space by adding a mini-split heating and cooling unit.
St. Cloud sits in Osceola County, where summer temperatures regularly exceed 90 degrees and humidity stays high from May through October. That means the glass, seals, and cooling system in a sunroom work harder here than almost anywhere else in the country. A contractor who has worked in Central Florida knows which materials hold up in this climate - and which ones fail within a few years. Florida also requires that glass in enclosed rooms meet wind-resistance standards specific to this region, enforced at inspection. That requirement is part of why a proper remodel here costs more than national cost guides suggest.
Many of St. Cloud's newer subdivisions - including those near Poinciana and Kissimmee - are governed by HOAs that require written approval before exterior work begins. Getting that approval before the permit application saves you from having to undo finished work. Older homes closer to the historic downtown and East Lake Toho sometimes have original aluminum-frame enclosures that were never designed for year-round use and need more structural work before new glass or insulation can be installed properly.
For more on building to Florida's energy and wind standards, see the U.S. Department of Energy window guidance and the Florida Building Commission.
Reach out and we will ask a few basic questions about the space and what is bothering you about it. We reply within one business day. This is not a sales call - it is a quick way to figure out whether the project is a good fit before anyone drives to your home.
We visit your home, measure the space, and check for water damage or structural issues that would affect the scope. After that visit you receive a written estimate - no quoting over the phone without seeing the space.
We submit the permit application to the Osceola County Building Division and, if your neighborhood has an HOA, help you prepare the request for written approval. Permit review in Osceola County typically takes one to three weeks. We handle the paperwork.
Work begins after permit approval, starting with any structural repairs, then glass, insulation, and cooling. County inspectors check the work at required stages. At completion, we walk the finished room with you before closing out the job.
Free on-site estimate. No commitment. We reply within one business day.
(689) 214-9067We have pulled permits through the Osceola County Building Division for sunroom work in St. Cloud. A contractor who knows the local process submits a complete application the first time, which avoids back-and-forth delays that stretch your timeline by weeks.
Every glass panel we install meets Florida's wind-resistance and energy code requirements. That means one product doing two jobs - blocking heat so the room stays cool, and rated for storm conditions so you are not starting over after the next hurricane season.
You receive a detailed written estimate after our on-site visit - not a range quoted over the phone. The scope covers what is included, what is not, and a realistic timeline with the permit wait built in. No surprises mid-project.
We have completed sunroom remodels for homeowners in St. Cloud and surrounding Osceola County communities. Ask us for local references, and feel free to contact those homeowners directly to ask how the project went and whether the work held up through the next storm season.
Every one of these proof points comes back to the same thing: you deserve to know the real scope and real cost before work begins, and you deserve a finished room that holds up through St. Cloud's summers and storm seasons. That is what we build toward on every job.
You can verify any Florida contractor's active license on the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation website before you hire.
Add a screen-enclosed outdoor living space that keeps bugs out while letting fresh air in.
Learn MoreWork through layout, glass options, and materials with a designer before breaking ground.
Learn MorePermit slots in Osceola County fill up - call or request an estimate now so your room is ready before the next Florida summer hits.